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Monday, January 25, 2021

REVIEW: M.A.Z.E. - Tour Tape 2020 (2020)

    2020 was not the best year for tours, though it seems Japanese punk rockers M.A.Z.E. were able to make it under the wire, finishing the final American leg of their tour in early March. This 6 track EP is a muddied lo-fi romp of wobbly processed guitars that only features 1 d-beat (on 'Typical Credit'). Raw and seemingly untouched in post, Tour Tape 2020 may appeal to certain garage-rock circles but never bows to Thee Oh Sees-level dry-as-dust monotony.

    What leads to some internal conflict for this listener is the band's 'punk' self-identity. They are far too interesting to be lumped in with current western 'punk,' a vapid term for commercialized, dummy-jock rock. Though in Japan it seems as if 'punk' is being explored and experienced, not worn and modeled. Which is the real 'punk'? Is the true 'punk' the easily digestible, take-no-risks rock? Or the off-beat, entry-level-0 art form? Simply, it doesn't matter. The grey swath of 'punk rock' sycophants and fetishists will continue to worship and make legend of a scene many people (including my parents) just lived.

    Who should be rewarded are the simon-pure with vision built through craft. While the willing mousinauts may find new favorites in Japanese and other non-anglophonic punk scenes, Cro-Mags fans may have difficulty sitting through closing track 'Pink Wall.'

 

For fans of: DEVO, Crack Cloud, The Fall

Like M.A.Z.E.? Give these a listen: XL-Fits, Men's Recovery Project, Gossip,

Sunday, January 24, 2021

REVIEW: MegaZoneEx - SEAPUNK'D (2021)

    Released through Australian "Post-internet" label Sunset Grid on January 24th of 2021, MegaZoneEx's SEAPUNK'D serves as a hopeful refresher of the vaporwave genre. While weaving their way through vaporwave and sister genres, MegaZoneEx explores but never falls victim to the cliches of those genres. Track highlights include the more accessible Ladytron-esque 'The Shuffle,' and industrial-nod 'On My Mind' built of a surprisingly soothing mix of vaporwave and industrial sonic aesthetics. SEAPUNK'D should be worked into casual rotation for the more particular vaporwave and future funk connoisseurs who may find themselves overwhelmed with quantity and underwhelmed with quality.

    Unfortunately, where SEAPUNK'D ultimately suffers is in its inability to distinguish itself as a fully realized album. From smaller details such as directionless track naming to a much more jarring max volume inconsistency, this effort at times can feel more like a mix-CD. Its 16 track, 29 minute runtime can feel very bloated, but hopefully going forward MegaZoneEx can enforce a stricter self-editorial approach.

    As stated in the album closing manifesto 'PSA,' "...[vaporwave] is still young. Its pioneers come and go, leaving it astray with no rules or guidelines. Vaporwave keeps dying because no one is here to save it." While vaporwave is far from saved, MegaZoneEx is keeping it alive with yet another breath.


For fans of: Ladytron, Macintosh Plus, Ventech97

Like MegaZoneEx? Give these a listen: Acetantina, vice*AIRバイス*空気自然の愛,  False Tropics

ANNOUNCEMENT on blog status, + brief thoughts on Lubert Das and the library of it all

Hello, and welcome to The 10th Dentist blog. If you're new to the blog, welcome! I'm sorry I missed you. If you've been around h...